4.4 Article

Phrenic afferent activation modulates cardiorespiratory output in the adult rat

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 126, Issue 6, Pages 2091-2103

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00433.2021

Keywords

phrenic afferents; phrenic motor output; plasticity; respiratory

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health [K99/R00 HL143207-01, SPARC OT2 OD023854, T32-ND043730, F31HL145831]

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The activation of phrenic afferents enhances contralateral phrenic motor amplitude when large-diameter fibers are activated, while recruitment of small-diameter fibers is associated with changes in burst frequency and cardiovascular parameters. Episodic activation of large-diameter phrenic afferents may also induce short-term plasticity.
Phrenic afferents project to brainstem areas responsible for cardiorespiratory control and the mid-cervical spinal cord containing the phrenic motor nucleus. Our purpose was to quantify the impact of small- and large-diameter phrenic afferent activation on phrenic motor output. Anesthetized and ventilated rats received unilateral phrenic nerve stimulation while contralateral phrenic motor output and blood pressure were recorded. Twelve currents of 40-Hz inspiratory-triggered stimulation were delivered (20 s on, 5 min off) to establish current response curves. Stimulation pulse width was varied to preferentially activate large-diameter phrenic afferents (narrow pulse width) and recruit small-diameter fibers (wide pulse width). Contralateral phrenic amplitude was elevated immediately poststimulation at currents above 35 mu A for wide and 70 mu A for narrow pulse stimulation when compared with animals not receiving stimulation (time controls). Wide pulse width stimulation also increased phrenic burst frequency at currents >35 mu A, caused a transient decrease in mean arterial blood pressure at currents >50 mu A, and resulted in a small change in heart rate at 300 mu A. Unilateral dorsal rhizotomy attenuated stimulation-induced cardiorespiratory responses indicating that phrenic afferent activation is required. Additional analyses compared phrenic motor amplitude with output before stimulation and showed that episodic activation of phrenic afferents with narrow pulse stimulation can induce short-term plasticity. We conclude that the activation of phrenic afferents 1) enhances contralateral phrenic motor amplitude when large-diameter afferents are activated, and 2) when small-diameter fibers are recruited, the amplitude response is associated with changes in burst frequency and cardiovascular parameters. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Acute, inspiratory-triggered stimulation of phrenic afferents increases contralateral phrenic motor amplitude in adult rats. When small-diameter afferents are recruited, the amplitude response is accompanied by an increase in phrenic burst frequency, a transient decrease in mean arterial blood pressure, and a slight increase in heart rate. Repeated episodes of large-diameter phrenic afferent activation may also be capable of inducing short-term plasticity.

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